Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
Warning. You're about to enter the arena and join the
battle to save America with your host, Sean Parnell.
Speaker 2 (00:14):
Good evening, America, Welcome to Battleground Live from Sea to
Shining Sea and everybody in between. Welcome Patriots. My name
is Sean Parnell. I am your host, been doing the
show for almost a year now. But I'm a combat veteran,
I'm a New York Times bestselling author, and more important
than those two things, I'm a humble servant of America.
(00:36):
I got a huge show for you tonight. I've coined
the show with Brian Dean Wright, who, by the way,
is one of the smartest foreign policy guys out there.
Former CIA operations officer, twenty year Democrat. Hey, he's gone
through a transition, but not a gender transition. He's now
(00:58):
an America First Patriot, and he's the host of a
great new podcast, a daily podcast called.
Speaker 3 (01:03):
The Right Report.
Speaker 2 (01:04):
So I've coined the nights that he comes on as
Right Night. Okay, So now we have Savage Wednesdays with
Savage Rich Barris, the best polster in the business, and
now we have Right Night with Brian Dean Wright. So
we've got a huge show today, we're gonna talk to
him a little bit later. We're gonna talk about right
off the top, men fighting in women's sports in kam
(01:27):
Lama lamamentum like whatever that means. I'm gonna give you
a little quick state of the race, and then we're
gonna do get into a global intelligence assessment Russian prisoners released,
Israel's on the war Path Global intelligence update with Brian
Dean Wright. Before we get into all that, make sure
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(01:47):
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We're lucky to have their support as well. Obviously, for those.
Speaker 2 (03:21):
Of y'all that have been watching the show for some time,
you know that I was in the chair for the
great and powerful Wendy Bell this morning. Three hours of
conservative talk radio in the morning and then Battleground Live
here at night and then rinse repeat same thing tomorrow.
So once this show is done, I'm going right back
into show planning tomorrow because it's always my goal to
(03:43):
bring you the most cutting edge political analysis and battlefield
intelligence that we got. So okay, let me just I
don't want to talk too long on admin stuff. Sometimes
I can do that. But state of the race, this
whole Kama law mentum stuff. Trust me when I tell you, folks,
(04:04):
it's all astro turf. It doesn't mean that she can't win.
Speaker 3 (04:08):
Okay.
Speaker 2 (04:09):
It doesn't mean that we should take her for granted.
It does not mean that we should be complacent. But
make no mistake about it. She is not somebody that
is competent. She's not somebody that knows how to run
a campaign and campaign well. Her strategy. Her strategy is
to hide for the next couple of months, only do friendly,
(04:33):
friendly media. And again you're on the receiving end of
a propaganda push the likes of which we have not
seen for a very very long time, one that exceeds
the propaganda push that Joe Biden received in twenty twenty
when they rigged that election against Donald Trump.
Speaker 3 (04:52):
Kamala.
Speaker 2 (04:52):
What what they did for Biden pales in comparison to
what they're doing for Kamala.
Speaker 3 (04:58):
Now.
Speaker 2 (04:59):
Just a couple months ago, they were saying Kamala would
be a drag on the ticket on CNN. Just a
couple of months ago, late night television shows were making
fun of Kamala Harris for only having a twenty eight
percent approval rating.
Speaker 3 (05:13):
So they were making fun of her who.
Speaker 2 (05:16):
Was lower than Dick Cheney, lower than Dick Cheney who
shot an old man in the face. So just a
couple of months ago that late night TV show hosts
were making fun of her and the media right now,
I make a joke about this, but they're positioning her
as black Indian woman Jesus Christ. I mean, that's really
(05:37):
what they're trying to do. And that's not me saying this.
That's how they're positioning her as a second coming of
some sort of Messiah's Messiah like figure. And I think people,
at least on the Democrat side of the House are
comparing her to Barack Obama. And I want you all
to be careful with that comparison, because let's just be
(06:01):
honest about something. Kamala Harris is not Barack Obama. Barack
Obama was a dangerous and radical president. I think he
is really the harbinger of all the destruction that we're
seeing in our nation today. He made that possible. He
(06:23):
set the tone. He was a great divider. But remember
that Barack Obama campaigned as a moderate. Remember that Barack
Obama was a marriage is between a man and a
woman type candidate. You think about Democrats today and how
crazy it would be to hold that view in the
Democrat Party. It's almost mind blowing how much that party
(06:45):
has changed. I'm not saying that Barack Obama believed those things.
I am saying that Barack Obama faked a good game.
Kamala Harris is not the same. Every single time Barack
Obama campaigned, he brought people to his cause using a
fake moderate message. Every single time Barack Obama spoke, it
(07:09):
was very nonpartisan. I mean again this I'm talking the
first time. He ran, not the Barack Obama that we
see today. Before he was elected president, he ran as
a moderate. He was able to what they call in
the political game, reshaped the electorate through that rhetoric. Kamala
(07:29):
Harris does not have that capability. You know, I talked
to and work with candidates, both incumbents and people who
have a desire to run for office, and there is
a common there is. I have seen candidates who the
best strategy for them is just to hide them, keep
them from interacting with people as much as possible, because
(07:52):
every time they interact with people, it's awkward, it's weird.
They don't know how to talk to people. Maybe they're wonkish,
I don't know, Okay. I've also seen candidates where every
time they give a speech, they alienate more and more people.
And the reason why that's difficult on a campaign is
because the harder they work, the more their campaign suffers. Now, listen,
(08:17):
I'm not discounting Kamala Harris. The media is gonna carry
water for her for a long time from now until
election day. Bank on that and that makes her dangerous.
But the more she campaigns, the more she will alienate people.
So what I'm putting forth to you is that this
bump that we're seeing in the polling is made possible
by this propaganda push. And then you're gonna have the
(08:39):
Democrat National Convention, there's gonna be another bump there. It's
gonna look like she's pulling ahead of Trump, and maybe
even in the moment, she'll bring the race to even.
But even though we only have a couple months to
the finish line, Kamala Harris is very very good at
alienating people and alienating them quickly. Now Here is what
the Trump campaign needs to do. The Trump campaign needs
(09:02):
to make the case against her. The Trump campaign needs
to raise the money to get up on television to
show the world how insane she is. Deep blue state
senators or governors or even deep red state senators or
governors that they oftentimes speak very well to the base,
(09:27):
but they have trouble meeting voters in the middle. Now,
Kamala Harris is the worst of that because she's from
Commi Fournia, She's from the left coast. Her viewpoints are
not the same as people in Arizona, Georgia, Wisconsin, Michigan, Pennsylvania.
It's very, very, very different. And the more the Trump
(09:51):
campaign can expose that by drawing the contrast, because that
is what good campaigns do, is they draw the con trust.
They say, life under me, this is what it was like.
And not only was life better with me, here's why,
here's what I'm going to do to make things even
better than before. But look at my opponent. When my
(10:15):
opponent wants to let criminals out of prison, my opponent
was the borders are and left the border wide open.
That's led to a fentanyl crisis, that's led to the
leading cause of death in America at eight between eighteen
and forty five, fentanyl streamed across our border because of that,
I mean, crime has skyrocketed. The Afghanistan withdrawal. Kamala had
(10:36):
a hand in that. Like, look at all of these
things that Kamala has done and had a hand in
that have been a complete disaster. And so Kamala Harris,
she is supposedly peep the Whisper campaign here in Pennsylvania,
is that she's going to pick Josh Shapiro as her
(10:56):
running mate. Now, if you've been watching this show, then
you all know that I told you weeks ago, even
before Biden was out of the race, that my sources
in Democrat circles had already said, even before Biden had
dropped out, that Kamala's people had already reached out to
Josh Shapiro. It's looking like Josh Shapiro and Kamala Harris
(11:18):
are about to close some sort of a deal. Governor
Shapiro canceled all his weekend fundraisers in the Hamptons, and
I quote Shapiro's trip was planned several weeks ago and
included several fundraisers for his own campaign. Committee spokesperson Manual
Bonder said his schedule has changed and he's no longer
traveling to the Hamptons this weekend. You couple that with
(11:38):
the fact that Kamala Harris will be in Philadelphia very soon.
People are starting to think it will be Josh Shapiro,
and that makes a lot of strategic and if you're
talking electoral college, it makes a lot of electoral sense
because Kamala Harris and the Democrats, what do I always
(11:59):
tell you, Pennsylvania is the lynchpin. Obviously that's my home state.
I know Pennsylvania in and out. But the Democrats absolutely
have to have Pennsylvania. It is a zero sum game.
They lose Pennsylvania, it's done. So she's picking Josh Shapiro
and the hopes that she will get a bump in
(12:20):
the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. I'm not sure that that's gonna
happen again. I'm not saying that we take it for granted.
Josh Shapiro is a quote quote unquote popular governor. Now
he's been untested, nobody's really vetted him, nobody's really taken
him to task at all on a national stage. He's
(12:42):
never really been in a competitive campaign. He's never really
run against anyone that can raise serious money. So this
is going to be a new test for him. And
he's not gonna come out of it unscathed. He's gonna
come out of it scarred and bruised. But vice presidential
candidates over time, especially if you look at the data,
they don't often sway presidential racist people vote for the
(13:04):
top of the ticket. That said, he is popular in
the state of Pennsylvania, but Josh Shapiro is going to
cause issues with the Democrat base. This from Jared Moskowitz.
He's a Democrat member of Congress. I will repeat that,
a Democrat member of Congress from Florida. He quote tweeted
(13:25):
an article in The Hill said, progressive sound the alarm
over potential Josh Shapiro's rising stock is VP, and he said,
these progressives don't want a jew. Let's say it out loud.
Imagine if a moderate dem said they didn't want a
certain minority, the condemnations would be deafening. Yet now we
hear much silence. So this is the Democrat party saying
(13:50):
that picking a Jew or calling out progressives about the
dangers of picking a Jew, which, by the way, it's
sickening that this is the world that we live in
and that this kind of behavior is copasetic in the
modern day Democrat Party. But here we are. No, I'm
not defending Josh Shapiro, but the guy's faith should have
nothing to do with the pick, right, But here you are,
(14:14):
the Democrat base is clearly fractured. And if their pick
is Josh Shapiro, I contend that while they might and
I say, and I do emphasize the word might, they
might get a boost in a state like Pennsylvania, it's
gonna hurt them other places with their base, in places
like Michigan, where that where half of the Democrat base
(14:36):
are pro hamas terrorist sympathizing psychos, they're already calling Josh
Shapiro genocide Josh. So again, we'll see how this plays
out in coming weeks. But I just wanted to kind
of give you a quick state of the race. Let
me tell you about a couple of our sponsors, and
then we've got Brian Dean right on deck. I don't
want to waste any of his time. He's far too
smart for that. Okay, So I got Brian Dean right
(14:56):
on deck. Brian Dean Wright, Formacy operations officer. He's the
host of a daily show, a daily podcast called The
Right Report, which is essentially your own presidential daily brief.
He's one of the smartest guys on foreign policy I know.
Without further ado, Brian Dean Wright. Welcome, my friend. Good
to see you.
Speaker 3 (15:16):
Well sir. Are you doing good? Man?
Speaker 2 (15:20):
So what do you think about I got to ask
you just right off the top. Do you feel any
better or have you learned anything about this assassination attempt
on President Trump at all since last we spoke. I
mean we've talked about a week ago when you were
last on this show. What I was struck by back
then is that not only do we have let like
(15:43):
we don't know anything of substance, like more than what
we knew the day the assassination attempt happened, but the
more we find out, the more inexplicable it gets.
Speaker 3 (15:53):
So where are you on all of this?
Speaker 1 (15:56):
Well, So, I think there are a couple of things
for folks to reflect on that I've asked my audience
to think about. So the assassin himself, we now know
that this is a guy who had very few friends,
a loner, but he had two phones, multiple electronic devices,
and used encryption apps abroad. Very suspicious, very unusual. So
I think about that in that profile not typical. Second,
(16:18):
one of the other things that I think that is
very alarming over the past week that we've learned is
we've had the debut FBI director plus the new Secret
Service acting director saying things that don't make sense. The
deputy director of the FBI saying that actually it has
never been in doubt that Trump was hit by a bullet,
and yet four or five days before, of course mister
(16:38):
Ray said that there was doubt. So this is the
long and continuing saga of the FBI leadership targeting something
that they don't like. In this case it's Trump. But
it's still alarming. No matter if you like Trump or not,
you plan to vote from or not, that to me
is yet one more game that we see the FBI playing. Also,
talking about the motivations of the assassin, you know, they're
(17:00):
pointing to stuff when he was fourteen to fifteen rather
than the stuff that's more recent. Well, the more recent
stuff shows that he's more of a leftists and that's
probably relevant because he tried to shoot Trump. So I
think that that game of the FBI, the politalization of
the FBI, that remains something that it was always of
concern to me. Now it is on rocket fire. So
that's the first piece. The second thing that the Secret
Service director saying that he just a lacked you know, imagination.
(17:25):
The quote that is just incredible, as you know, is
he's telling his folks that they just lacked imagination to
think that the world might want to assassinate a president
former or otherwise. And it's like, come on, imagination, this
is not a John Lennon song here, that we just
need to imagine the threats out in the world, like
come on, we're not stupid, but they're treating us like
we're stupid. And that is the part that's alarming for me.
(17:47):
That is regime stuff that I've seen in places like
Egypt and Pakistan. They don't care about even coming close
to the truth. It can be audaciously wrong, but they
also say it. And that's a pretty dangerous point when
you get to a place where or your regime leadership
it just doesn't care what you think, and they will
say the most bald faced lies up to end, including
other silly things like the flat roof is really steep.
(18:09):
That's the part that starts to really alarm me, is
that the degree the audacity of the lies.
Speaker 2 (18:15):
Brian, you mentioned something about Christopher Ray saying, oh, there's
a question as to whether or not President Trump was
hit by a bullet or shrapnel. To me, that seemed
like a psyop intended to give these Trump assassination hoaxers
some form of cover and credibility in the press, because
moments after Christopher ra and it really was moments after
(18:37):
Christopher Ray said this, there were all these media outlets
with the headline basically, you know, Trump not shot or
Trump was injured an incident, And I gotta believe that
he did that intentionally and for that purpose.
Speaker 1 (18:52):
What do you think, of course, he of course he did.
Look he knew walking into that testimony. Thirty four percent
of Democrats, according to some of the most recent polling,
believe in these Trump conspiracy theories about not being shot
or whatever it may be. He knew that going in,
so he knew he had a very special obligation to
not spread that stuff, not to encourage it, to not
stoke it, and he did. Anyway, that is exactly what
(19:14):
James Comey did his predecessor when he had that Steele dossier.
They had already investigated it and they knew it was garbage,
but he briefed it to Trump knowing that the fact
that he would brief it doing that gave it a
degree of credence, credibility, the press would run with it.
That's exactly what he did, and that's what the press did.
So this is where we start to get back to
what Chuck Schumer, Democrat senator from New York, said that
(19:35):
the Intel community have six wave Sunday of getting back
at you. This is exactly what they're doing. They know
precisely what they're doing. They're trying to again damage Trump
because they know if this guy comes into his team,
they are going to wipe out all the partisan frosters
at the DOJ and the FBI. So they're trying to
save their skins, of course they are. So yeah, it's
part of the continuing game. We all know that if
(19:57):
you've been paying attention for a while, and it's wildly,
wildly dangerous.
Speaker 2 (20:01):
Wow, So have you been paying attention to this Russian
prisoner swap that happened today. Did you see the exchange?
I mean, I've got the sound. I'll play it for
you and I'll get your reaction. Biden's asked, why you
know in this video? Hey, well, Trump said he could
do it better. Listen, listen to what Biden says.
Speaker 1 (20:20):
Said that he could have gotten the hostages out without
giving anything in exchange. What do you say to that?
What do you say to President Trump? Now former president?
Why didn't you do? Who he is president? I think
that was what they call a mic drop moment at
(20:41):
the end.
Speaker 2 (20:42):
I mean, really, CNN, a microp moment. What they failed
to say is that two of it's hard to, you know,
secure the release of prisoners when two of them were
prison in prison while Biden was president. The other one
Trump was in negotiations with with trying to get him out,
but they wanted a bunch of Russia one of a
bunch of Russian spies release and Trump said no. I mean, well,
(21:04):
let's start with this.
Speaker 1 (21:05):
Had that question been asked to Biden before ten am
or after four pm, his answer would have been a
da blah belt. So let's just start with that. That
the manny in the Oval Office only functions in certain hours,
so he was able to respond because the Mets were
kicking in. So let's start with that second big picture here.
What's going on is Russia and other regimes around the world.
(21:28):
What they're trying to do is capture more Americans in
different places, kidnapped them in some cases. In Russia, they're
just grabbing them off the streets. They're charging them with
bolony so that they can then get leverage. Right, So
we know that Russia is increasing its sabotage operations and
sabotage teams throughout Europe, and so he's trying to get
as many any chess pieces as he can to then
(21:49):
swap because he knows a lot of his teams are
going to get wrapped up, and they are already starting
to in places like Spain, France, they've been wrapped up. Slovenia.
There was a couple incredible story there about those two
coming from Brazil trying to burrow into Slovenian society. They
got caught. So he's trying to gain or he's trying
to kidnap these people part of his his strategy to
get the others out down the road. So you know,
(22:11):
is this a dunk on Trump that Biden, you know,
offered short is just because he's an idiot, and that's
what Biden does when he's functional. He just babbles. But
it's really part of something that I think a lot
of folks should think about or reflect on. Is this
kidnapping stuff is going to get worse. So if you're
going to Europe, I would not recommend going to Russia
for a while because you might not end up where
(22:33):
you want to go. So that, I think is the
headline that folks need to think about.
Speaker 2 (22:36):
I mean, Brian, I have to ask you know, you're
a former CIA guy, and I was reading some of
the background of the prisoners that were released. I mean,
are there any is there a chance that these people
really I mean not that I want our spies to
ever be captured, of course not. I don't want to
see that ever, not now, not ever. I hope they're
successful in executing their mission abroad. But is there a
(23:00):
chance that some of the I mean that some of
these prisoners when you look, some of them are fluent
in Russian and citizens of five different countries, and there's
certainly these don't seem like you know, Jane Doe, American citizen,
because you know, we have somebody who wasn't released from
a Russian prison. His name is Mark Vogel. He's a
teacher from western Pennsylvania. Been trying to secure his release
(23:21):
for some time now. The Biden administration has completely ignored
the family. They haven't even bothered. The State Department hasn't
even bothered to classify him as unlawfully detained. So why
are we freeing some Russian prisoners but not normal Americans?
It just has me scratching my head.
Speaker 1 (23:38):
Okay, So look, there are two kinds of spies, generally speaking,
or officers that the CIA might deploy into the world.
One is an officially covered officer and the other's a
knock officer or a non officially covered. So the official
covers are like, you know, I work for the Department
of Agriculture or State Department or whatever, and those people
get deployed abroad underneath the umbrella of the United States government.
(23:58):
The non official covered are somebody who works for some
consultancy allegedly, and they then get deployed into a foreign country.
And those people can be American citizens, they can be
non American citizens, but they don't have the official protection
the diplomatic cover or protection that is offered by the government.
They're they're all They're on their own. They're knocks. That
(24:19):
is what you're asking, I think is is what does
the profile look like of a knock? In coulde any
of these people who are arrested inside of Russia?
Speaker 3 (24:25):
I hope, I hope that, I hope that.
Speaker 1 (24:28):
You know.
Speaker 2 (24:28):
I'm not trying to be like a crazy person here,
but you know, this is fascinating to me. And I
certainly don't mean to interrupt you, but you're getting at
exactly what I was getting to, So go on.
Speaker 3 (24:38):
I'm sorry.
Speaker 1 (24:39):
Yeah, no, So your point is valid. Are any of
these people possibly knocks? And the answer is, you bet,
they could certainly be. I don't know. That's the whole
point behind developing somebody's cover. It's so good and so natural,
it doesn't seem like they're a knock. So I don't
know what the answer is. But what I do know
is that two things can be true. One, some of
(25:00):
these people can be knocks, and that's why the government
is trying so aggressively to pull them back because they
can't acknowledge it. But they really are a knocks.
Speaker 3 (25:07):
But it's also.
Speaker 1 (25:08):
True that Moscow is just grabbing people off the streets,
arresting them and holding them and using them as you know, pawns.
So both of those things can be true. And that's why,
again I come back to the headline for everybody, you
might not want to go to a place like Russia
for a while because you've matened up being a prop
either way, if your work for the CIA or not.
Speaker 2 (25:26):
Yeah, okay, I want to do a couple of ad
reads and come back to you. I want to get
in once I'm done with the read, I want to
jump into like what we have coined. By the way,
I've coined the episode Brian, right night, you know, so
right tonight, right, you know, And I can't even take
credit for I'm.
Speaker 1 (25:40):
Not worrying underwear. This is perfect right night.
Speaker 3 (25:43):
It's very it's very very official.
Speaker 2 (25:47):
And I said, in fact, you know what, I said,
that the audience was excited that you were coming on tonight.
If your response via text was well, shit, I guess
I should put underwear on. So I guess you actually
didn't do that. So false promises here from Brian Dean
Wright on the show.
Speaker 1 (26:00):
I'm gonna be honest with you, I'm in Arizona. Okay.
We don't wear clothes here generally because it's hot. It's
either the he kills you or the illegals. Now, the
good thing is that Kamala is not going to kill
you because we're near the border and she doesn't come here.
So that's why it's very important that you don't wear
clothes and watch out for the illegals when you're in Arizona.
Just a little tip for Pope chet.
Speaker 3 (26:26):
You said you not me.
Speaker 1 (26:28):
No, I didn't. You're You're a bad man. You're a
bad man.
Speaker 3 (26:31):
Okay, stay right there. I'll be right back. We're going
to do our Global Intel update when we come back.
Stay right there. I'll be right with you. Okay.
Speaker 2 (26:38):
We've been talking to Brian Dean Wright, former CIA operations
officer and host of The Right Report Daily podcast. Uh,
welcome back, my friend. Thank you for sticking around. I
want to get into the I want to get into
the Global Intel Update. Actually, wait, let me pause that
real quick. Born to Ride for forty five through twenty
(27:01):
bucks in the Rumble rant tips. Thank you Born to
Ride for forty five. I wear the T shirt Born
to Ride for forty five all the time. Commander Melanie,
my wife would even argue that I probably wear it
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hundred percent of the tips that we get in the
chat go right back into the show to give you
a better quality show.
Speaker 3 (27:18):
So thank you. Born to Ride for forty five.
Speaker 2 (27:20):
Okay, Brian Global Intel Update, Let's start with Israel on
the war path. I read a couple of days ago
about this horrifying attack of twelve Israeli children on a
soccer field killed in a rocket attack from Hesbla. And
since that time, Israel has this assassin squad essentially that
(27:44):
has been just wiping out key leaders, a key leader
from Hamas, a key leader from the Iranian Revolutionary Guard,
a key leader from Hesbela. I mean, like, it's kind
of unbelievable. What's your take on all this?
Speaker 1 (27:59):
Look, we have worked with the Israelis on other projects,
and I will tell you that they are whether you
support the Israeli stage or whatever your politics might be,
they are the finest service in the world. I would
say number two to the ciaight, but maybe even number one.
They are an incredibly effective service, so I'm not surprised
to see what they were able to do. So we
start in Lebanon. What they were able to do here,
(28:22):
they were able to detract effectively the number two of
HESBLA in that country. In Beirut, they were able to
lay a missile strike on a building residential complex next
to a hospital. Nobody else was killed in terms of
inside of the hospital, but this guy, the number two was.
It's wonderful news if you're not just Israeli but also
American and French. That's because this guy was responsible for
(28:43):
the barracks bombing in Beirut back in the eighties, so
we have a lot of wonderful reason to celebrate this
guy's death. He also killed over one hundred French soldiers
at the time as well, so great news there that
this guy was neutralized. We also have a guy that
was neutralized in Gaza. He was one of the senior
guys who organized the attack on October seventh. That happened
(29:04):
about three weeks ago, but just confirmed today. We also
had this guy in Iran, and this is a big deal.
Speaker 3 (29:11):
This off is.
Speaker 1 (29:11):
Incredible, and the Israelis do some of the best of
it inside of Iran. What they did is they recruited
somebody inside what's called the IRGC, one of the best
and most elite military institutions inside of Iran. They recruited
somebody who knew where this guy was going to be,
this HOMAS leader was going to be staying what exact
hotel room, not only the hotel but the room itself.
(29:34):
They then put a bomb inside of the room, and
that they were a couple of miles away, it's believed,
and when they got confirmation, they flipped the switch, the
bomb goes off and they killed the guy. What does
that show you? First of all, it shows you absolute
incredible penetrations of human sources inside of Iran, absolutely incredible
hat tip to him. Second, if you are now Iran
(29:56):
in terms of what comes next and why we should care,
You've just been miliated. Hamas and Hezwa both humiliated in
Gaza and most especially in Beirut, and Iran was just
humiliated in Tehran. So they are now looking at revenge,
of course they are. So that's going to be the
escalation that we've all been so afraid of. We've been
talking about it on my show since last December. Kind
(30:17):
of ebbs and flows depending on the diplomacy that has
been levied out trying to solve this issue in Gaza.
But the bottom line is these hits were legit very
very sort of tailored and embarrassing for the Raniom regime.
So I think we are going to probably see something
this weekend, probably Saturday, maybe Sunday in terms of reprisal attacks.
(30:39):
How big those are, where those are inside of Israel?
Fingers crossed, because this could be the big one, the
big spark that ignites a much bigger war. But make
no mistake, Iran is the one who is pushing this.
So whatever comes next, that is where the blame laves.
Speaker 3 (30:53):
Yeah, what does come next?
Speaker 2 (30:54):
I mean because this is a significant escalation and Iran
is already promised attacks within the Israeli homeland as saw
missiles file fired from Hesbelah were presumably from Hesbela from
Lebanon today just before we came we went live on
the show. Iran has to execute these attacks in order
to save face, do they not? And if that's the case,
(31:18):
where does this go from here?
Speaker 3 (31:19):
My friend? I mean, because this does seem like a
fairly serious escalation.
Speaker 1 (31:23):
And it's a big deal because he Blaw is not
Humas and by that I mean Hesblah has over one
hundred thousand missiles and rockets. They've got to over one
hundred thousand soldiers. There's also reporting from Kuwait that has
been confirmed by some Israeli reporting that show that Iran
has given HESBLA a kind of munition called an EMP
bomb or an EMP attack that basically fries electronics. That's
(31:44):
a big deal because it could fry the radar system
part of the Iron Dome missile defense system. So if
Heswlah were to use that first knock out the defenses,
and then Iran launches their barrage, there's going to be
the defenses are going to be down. It's like the
castle walls have collapsed and the hordes are gonna start
flowing in. And I don't know if that's going to
be actual people, it could certainly be missile strikes. It
all depends on how much the Iatola wants to escalate. Also,
(32:08):
there's a new president of Iran and he's got a
lot to prove as well within in the regime. So
the ingredients for escalation here are serious. I'm watching it.
We can have profound impacts on the US economy because
of trading the Red Sea. We could have impacts on
US service members and places like Iraq, in Syria, also
some of our ships in the Mediterranean and in the
Red Sea. So this is a big deal and this
(32:30):
is a tough weekend. So heads on a swivel.
Speaker 2 (32:33):
So, Brian, I want to ask you about and you
might not know because zun confirmed so far, but the
reports of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard general they're saying was
killed in Syria. Israel hasn't come out and claimed credit
for that yet. I don't believe they've They've claimed credit
for the others, but killing of an Iranian Revolutionary Guard
general seems also like an escalation.
Speaker 3 (32:54):
Have you heard anything about that?
Speaker 1 (32:56):
So this is part of the pattern we've seen over
the past ten months what the Israelis are doing. They
have excellent sources both on the ground and be a
sigan so capturing emails, phone calls, text messages and the
rest of it. They have an excellent understanding of who
these Hesbelon forces are in Lebanont, in Syria and elsewhere.
And over the past ten months they've just picked these
guys off one after the next, and that has maybe
(33:17):
Hesbela incredibly anxious because there's like, who wear all the
spies how are they getting us. So they've been increasingly
anxious about this, and that's why they're actually not acknowledging
a lot of these deaths because they don't want their
own people to realize that they have these profound vulnerabilities
and that these Raelis are actually quite good. So that's
why Hisbela is not acknowledging a lot of these deaths.
(33:37):
But that means there's a lot of activity going on
behind the scenes that would suggest we could be up
for some serious escalation because these Raelis are just handed
the ass to these Hesbela, Hamas and Iranian people.
Speaker 3 (33:50):
Wow.
Speaker 2 (33:50):
God, you know that's such a good point and one
that I didn't consider. Well, that's fascinating. You know, we'll
keep an eye on it.
Speaker 3 (33:57):
Man.
Speaker 2 (33:57):
I hate to say, don't want to see the war escalate,
but you know, it is far beyond time for Israel
to really eradicate Hamas. That's step one, I mean, because
if if, if a two state solution is something that
you're serious about from a foreign policy standpoint, it simply
cannot happen with a terrorist organization like Hamas remaining attack
(34:20):
wanting genocide against against all of the Jews in Israel. Hesbel,
I mean Hesba, I mean, it's just seems like something's
got to give. And you hear the Left talk about
a two state solution all the time, but they don't
recognize the threat of all these terrorist groups around Israel.
Speaker 3 (34:33):
They want to keep Israel on a leash all the time.
Speaker 1 (34:35):
So, and to that point, the reason why Hamas over
the past six weeks or so has been more interested
in peace deal or ceasefire at least is because we
have intel showing that Kamasa's commanders A have been decimated
of their battalions. They've only got maybe one or two left. Second,
the leadership that does remain, we know they're going into
those tunnels. They're going to ya Ya Sinwar, who is
(34:55):
the guy who's either in conunist or don Rafa, and
they're saying to him, dude, we're getting our ass is kicked.
We gotta go for a ceasefire here or we're gonna
be toast. We have lost our supply lines, our rat
lines into Egypt because the Israelis control what's called the
Philadelphi Corridor. That's a stretch of ground between Egypt and Gaza.
So now the Israelis control that and their older dudes
(35:17):
are dying and yay yah. Sinwar is like no, no, no, no,
we will keep fighting, and these commanders are like, bro,
we are all getting swacked.
Speaker 2 (35:25):
Man.
Speaker 1 (35:26):
So there is this tension inside of Hamas right now.
By the way I used to do the briefs. Can
you imagine the CIA, You know, this guy's.
Speaker 3 (35:32):
Like rolling in like the cowboy, Like, who's this guy? Super?
Speaker 1 (35:35):
Not professional?
Speaker 3 (35:36):
Anyway, perfect, it's perfect. Yeah, it's perfect.
Speaker 2 (35:39):
If I was a director of the CIA, I would
direct all my clandestine Service operations officers to act exactly
the same way.
Speaker 1 (35:45):
In form and entertain.
Speaker 3 (35:46):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (35:47):
The point is, uh, so that is why Hamas is
they're responding with more interest. It's because they're dying. So
hat tip to the Massade, the ADF and whatever your
politics are, you know, be in his cabinet. They are
kicking the lip and crap out of Hamas and Hebelah
and they got those guys on the run. But that's
not to say his blood doesn't have to be massive
(36:07):
arsenal and a lot of will because at the end
of the day, you're right, Hamas and Hezbla and Iran
have one goal and that is to wipe Israel off
the face of the map and kill the Jews. That's
their foundational goal. So long as that remains true, you
ain't gonna have piece in the Middle East. And there's
always going going to be some problem or set of
problems in the Israel and beyond.
Speaker 2 (36:27):
So let's pause here real quick on the global intelligence update.
Myron in the live chat tip twenty bucks Brian, we
love him. He said, get some nice pants, great show.
Speaker 1 (36:43):
With twenty bucks. Okay, let's see what I come up.
Speaker 3 (36:45):
I'm on Biden's county.
Speaker 1 (36:48):
Sure I'm gonna be able to buy the zipper, which
you know you're not a chance. You gotta be careful anyway.
Speaker 2 (36:55):
Okay, let's go from Israel hezblah Hamas to Ukraine. F
sixteen's Ukraine's got them. Are they going to have an
impact on the battlefield? And is this going to sway
the conflict in the war against Russia in any sort
of significant way.
Speaker 1 (37:11):
Well, there's a great bridge here because you know the
pier in dock system that was off the coast of
Gaza that was complete failure. That is what the F
sixteen program is in Ukraine. So here's what we know
they got about three or four different F sixteen jets. Problem,
those jets require a very long runway. Ukraine doesn't have
many of those. Second, they also need a certain protective
(37:32):
cover at those runways to prevent themselves from being blown up,
as it were, by the Russian bombs or drones. They
don't have those coverings. Next, the F sixteen program requires
a year's long effort to build out the logistics chain,
whether that be engineers, mechanics, the rest of it. Ukraine
doesn't have that either. Also, we have the issue of pilots.
Someone he's got to fly them. Well, there are two
(37:54):
training programs, one in Denmark, the other in Tucson, Arizona.
Those have not been going well.
Speaker 3 (37:59):
Why because, as it.
Speaker 1 (38:00):
Turns out, people in Ukraine speak Ukrainian and the people
in Denmark do not, nor do people Intusun Arizona. There
is a language barrier. They have struggled to work through
that and so it has delayed the training. So you
have these three things that could have been anticipated should
have been anticipated, like the runways and the coverings. Obviously,
the other issue is these jets. They have to fire
(38:23):
something right, so where are those munitions gonna come from? Well,
the stocks of the F sixteen munitions. There is some
in Europe and some of the United States, but the
Europeans don't want to give up theirs. Why because they
don't have very many. They are militaries, their airlines or
their air forces. Rather, they're kind of the equivalent of
if you have paper airplanes. That's kind of what Europe's
(38:44):
air force is like right now. You know, they can
throw a paper airplane. That's the best they got. So
that's why the Europeans went to the Biden minehouse and said, look,
you've got to give up your limited supplies of F
sixteen munitions because we hardly have any ourselves, so how
can we possibly defend ourselves? Has got to run out
first and then we will. And Biden agreed, So we
are sending our limited munitions to Kiev for the F sixteens.
(39:08):
The other issue is what is Lensky gonna do with
that even if he can't get these birds in the sky. Well, Russia,
our Moscow has known these things have been common for many, many,
many months. They've already anticipated, They've already built out the
defense systems, so we can expect then bottom line, this
is probably gonna end up a lot like that Gazippeer
system silly to begin with. It shouldn't have never happened
(39:29):
because the battlefield changed or their conditions that just were
appropriate in the Ukraine. But we did it anyway because
it sounded really great. And all those people you know,
have their Ukraine flags and they're like, well I'm doing something.
You know, I ate my Chicken Kiev instead of Chicken Kiev.
Now I support the F sixteens. Well, that's right, you
accomplished nothing, you.
Speaker 2 (39:47):
Know what, Brian, I'm surprised that the Ukrainians even need
F sixteens because I was told by Adam Kinsinger that
the ghost of Kiev was a killer in the skies.
Speaker 1 (39:59):
So well Adam Kinzinger. Also, if I don't know if
you knew this, there's some very top sacred intel that
he only has one hamster running the wheel up there
up in the brain, and unfortunately the hamster got into
some sauce and it has not been very well ever
since that happened back in two and four, based on
my sources at the CIA. So Adam unfortunately is not well.
(40:21):
He is not a well man. So don't trust anything
a hamster says.
Speaker 3 (40:25):
I was you know.
Speaker 2 (40:25):
I was listening to this great podcast this morning called
The Right Report. Yeah, and you were talking about like
one of the things that was concerning that the United
States military as right now has three to four weeks
of ammunition, So it concerns me that we're sending F
sixteen ammunition to Ukraine. And also that there is almost
an unbelievable patriotism problem in the United States military. One
(40:49):
you have left this who hate America and don't love
this country anyway. Military is chalk full of those people now,
and then you have conservatives kind of throwing up your
hands and saying, what the hell is the point? America
is going to hell in a handbasket. This isn't the
country that I signed up to serve. So all of
this creates just a constellation of issues that not only
as it pertains to it affects Ukraine, but how we
(41:10):
protect ourselves here.
Speaker 1 (41:12):
Yeah, and I'll tell you that's not just your opinion.
There was a commission, a bipartisan commission, who came out
with a report on Tuesday echoing everything that you just said.
The one thing that I would add, or a couple
of things. One they said in the Pacific Theater we
are likely to get our butts handed to us because
the Chinese have a much stronger industrial base to produce
all kinds of things that we can't. There's some hope
(41:33):
that our Ai revolution and infusing that in drones might
help us punch back a little bit harder than we
might otherwise. There's also some hope that we can repurpose
some old bombs and put those on the B two
stealth bomber and knock out their navy fingers crossed. But
one of the other things that this report said earlier
this week, and this really gets too, frankly some of
(41:54):
the things that you were talking about with your sponsors,
the American people have no idea how vulnerable we own.
Our water systems, our food systems, our ports, all of
it profoundly vulnerable. And the argument that they've made in
this report is there's very little resiliency in this country
amongst the people, certainly our systems, but also the people,
so that we are this precarious moment, very very perilous, really,
(42:19):
and if you're not prepared, if you're not thinking about it,
it's not a high confidence or absolute certainty. The terrible
things are going to happen, but all the lights are
kind of blinking red, and we're not in a great
shape right now. So you would be really wise not
to get panicked, but just to properly prepare and make
sure that you and your family are going to survive
whatever might come. And if you don't use that stuff,
you know, day in and day out, find use it
(42:40):
to go camping in or haunting or whatever. But have
some stuff on the shelf because things are not looking
real great.
Speaker 2 (42:45):
Okay, So let's go from Ukraine F sixteen, US military
weakness to what Venezuela and the elections are. I've covered
it twice, talked about it with you on the Jesse
Kelly on this nationally syndicated radio program.
Speaker 3 (42:58):
What was it that's last week Friday? Yeah, I talked.
Speaker 2 (43:01):
About the Venezuelan elections earlier on in the week. Is
there any chance that the freedom fighters who are pushing
for election integrity have a shot to depose Meduro down there?
It's crazy, Brian, I had a Venezuelan driver and I
was at this iHeart meeting down in Florida. He said
he escaped Hugo Chavez in two thousand and one with
a one year old and a two year old son.
(43:23):
And he said to me, first of all, he loves America,
but he said to me, he sees America following in
what are almost the identical footsteps of Venezuela twenty five
years ago. He's like, I fled one communist country, and
I fear America is going down that path too.
Speaker 3 (43:39):
Is there any chance that Meduro exits stage right and
gives up power.
Speaker 1 (43:46):
Well, first to what your driver said, Look, I was
a Democrat for twenty years and that's why I left
the party. It became violent and bigoted on American and Marxist.
So that's another conversation. But what's going on in Venezuela.
Is this the Marxist dictator of that just said yesterday
that the opposition will never ever regain or gain power
in that country. That means that elections are irrelevant. He
(44:09):
will always remain dictator so long as he's alive. So
if there were any hope that he might step aside,
those are all but gone. So now the question is
how can he be forced out? There is a possibility
that he might be able to be forced out if
Brazil and Columbia, which also have left as presidents might
push him out if they can get the electoral data
from the opposition. They've got about seventy percent of the
(44:31):
electoral or vote tallies that they're now giving to the
Brazilians and to the Colombians. They might be able to
sit him down to be like, look, bro, you know
we're going to shack you or where otherwise going to
make you like miserable if you don't leave, And that's possible.
It's unlikely, but it's possible. You never know, And Maduro
could always say, really, well, I've got Beijing and Moscow
(44:52):
in my back pocket, which he does, and they are
more than happy to prop him up. So now we
start to get into some pretty big boy games about
how this plays out. But the bottom line why we
should care ten million people, and a recent survey said
if Maduro wins, they're leaving ten billion Venezuelans. Keep that
in mind. Ten or so million over the past three
and a half years have come over the southern border.
(45:12):
We're looking at exact same amount that could come over
the border in the next three to six months. So
that's why this matters. And we just got worded this
week that Trende Ragua, which is a Venezuelan gang is
now operating in this country, and they have told cops
that you are going to be shot and killed as
we're trying to grab more turf. So of the ten
million Venezuelans, a lot of them are just wonderful people.
But if you're not vetting them, you don't know who's
(45:33):
coming over the border. That's Trump's point, and he is right.
So we could expect that of those ten million that
would come, some are going to be these trende Ragua guys,
and that's bad news. So that's why we should care
about Venezuela.
Speaker 2 (45:45):
Man, your Spanish accent is top notch. You know you
don't You're not doing the Spanish lisp, so you're just
moreed going with a Mexican dialect here right.
Speaker 1 (45:54):
Well, I am near the border, so I work at
every day when I do everything.
Speaker 2 (45:58):
So yeah, okay, so you flagged this story for me
about the Russia, Russia's Wagner group getting their asses kicked
in MOLLI.
Speaker 3 (46:08):
My question to you is why does this matter to
any of us?
Speaker 1 (46:11):
Yeah, So, first of all, Malli is not only a
party drug, it's also a country in Africa. So what
do we care about. So, Mali is a country is
central western part of Africa. You used to be part
of this incredible empire in centuries gone by, but it's
part of an area called the Sahel, and for many
years it was under the thumb of the French, the
colonial empire. They got kicked out in the nineteen sixties,
(46:32):
give or take, and since then, Malli's kind of been
in this wreck, right, a lot of different dictators coming
in and out. We haven't really cared except for the
fact that these Islamic radicals who've been really really intensely
involved in the Sahara for many years, al kada Isis others. Well,
the French went back in at the invitation of the
Malians and to try to kill these guys, right, the
(46:54):
Islamic radicals. Well, the president of Mali was thrown out
about four years ago in a coup. The current military
leaders stepped in weed. The United States and France were like, ah,
we like democracy, except if it's Trump, and then we
don't like democracy, and then we overthrow our own government.
But anyway, we like democracy. America and France we want
that president back in. And so it pissed off the
(47:16):
military leadership and they kicked us out. So who came
in the Russians the Wagner Group also called Wagner Group.
But the bottom line is those mercenaries went into to
fill our shoes. They've been doing pretty good except for
the last week. They got their asses handed to them.
So if you look at a map of Molli, there
is a city, very famous city called Timbo.
Speaker 2 (47:35):
Where the hell is Molli? I I know the answer
to this question, just for the viewers to say.
Speaker 1 (47:40):
Yeah, that's sure. So you're looking at a map, you're
gonna see countries like Senegal and Guinea and that. Uh
let's see, there's there's Ghana not too far far away,
but it's in that sent north sort of central western area.
It's a it's pretty strange looking place, gonna look at
(48:00):
Lama being But anyway, so what do we care about Molly.
Let's get back to that two things first. But both
bless Our Hearts CNN and New York Times have reported
is that there are these travel agencies being set up
in places like Guee and Mauritania that are taking all
of these Molly people who want to get the hell
out of the poverty or the war and they're actually
(48:23):
sending them to our southern border. So some of the
African migrants that you're seeing are directly coming from this
conflict in Mali, from these fake travel agencies. So that's
another issue. But that's the first reason why we should
care like what's going on there, because more of those
people are coming here. Second, what's really interesting about this
part of the world is about forty five miles north
northwest of the capital Bomaco. Back in nineteen eighty seven,
(48:46):
some guys were drilling for water. There was none there,
but there was this odd wind coming out of the hole,
and this guy, one of the drillers, good old boy,
you know, he likes a cigarette and he's walking around.
He go looks down into the borehole with a cigarette. Boom,
it lights up. That wind was hydrogen. It was a
natural deposit of hydrogen. So what happens when hydrogen burns,
the exhaust is water. It's brilliant. It's an absolutely brilliant
(49:10):
form of energy. It's been long one of these goals
of trying to create true green energy is a natural
supply of hydrogen. But science has long said that's not real.
We can't ever find hydrogen deposits naturally, we have to
make it well. This Molli and Well proved that to
be false. So what is it about the geology of
this part of the world that allows for this kind
(49:31):
of well? How many more wells are there? That's why
this part of the world could become profoundly important the
next Saudi Arabia or the Texas Permian basin. What is
there geology that allows this to happen. We know that
water and iron minerals actually mixed and created. That's probably
what's going on here. But it would be wonderful to
have a good relationship with a Malian government to send
in our folks to try to really get a handle
(49:52):
of this and own that territory and understand the science
behind what's going on, because maybe we can own Molli,
or we can own it in our own backyard if
we've got this same kind of geology. So it's a huge,
really interesting place because of illegal aliens, because of hydrogen impossibilities,
and also what happens with the Russians and the Wagner
group and what Putin does next. That's why this part
of the world is so interesting. It's like a Star
(50:13):
Wars you'll see right in the Sahara desert and Timbuctoo
and these crazy dudes and tattooine. It's the same kind
of thing. See, iwa guys, we geek out about that
kind of stuff. The dirtier and the nastier the better.
Speaker 2 (50:23):
I don't wonder if if this, if this were Star
Wars and we were on Tatooine, maybe they would use
kyber crystals and manufacturers lightsabers there. I don't have no
idea what you just said, but yes, I thought, well,
you made it seem like you were some Star Wars fan,
so I.
Speaker 3 (50:38):
Watched the show.
Speaker 1 (50:39):
I'm not a nerd.
Speaker 3 (50:40):
Okay, it sprouted.
Speaker 2 (50:41):
Out some nomenclature and the CIA guy just right over
your head.
Speaker 3 (50:45):
You set me up for failure. Let me tell you.
Around the agency Star Wars geek, we.
Speaker 1 (50:49):
Are training to know a little bit about a lot
of things. But if you scratch, turns out we're just
the word. We're dumb.
Speaker 3 (50:54):
Great, you know what you set You set me up
for that.
Speaker 2 (50:57):
This was like a spy thing, like I'm going to
expose Sean as a horrible treky.
Speaker 3 (51:03):
And Star Wars nerve.
Speaker 2 (51:04):
Yeah, I just trotted out my knowledge of the lightstabers
were made of private crystals.
Speaker 3 (51:08):
For God saying recover from this.
Speaker 1 (51:11):
You're already married, fine, just make sure she doesn't leave you.
Speaker 3 (51:17):
Great.
Speaker 2 (51:18):
So, yeah, that's great. I'm sure this knowledge will really
help me in that fight, you know. So Okay, So
before I let you go, I want to talk about
some good news autism research. Tell us about that, and
tell us about cancer and exercise, which is research based
in Israel.
Speaker 1 (51:37):
Yeah, so we've got this on my show. I love
to talk about good news wherever we can find it,
especially from abroad. But the piece about autism, So for
folks out there who have kiddos or loved ones who
struggle with it, you all know that treatment options are limited.
The earlier you can get involved, the better. One of
the things that we're learning from some research out of
the University of Maryland with some European partners. The two
(51:59):
girls the interview in their diet. That was the first
thing they did about or age eighteen months, and they
really changed the diet because there's a belief that autism
has a connection to the gut. Like the gut bacteria
and fungi and viruses all getting messed up. So that
was part of the belief, and what they did is
that they proved through diet in addition to some other
(52:20):
auditory changes and helping them with their social skills, they
were able to basically effectively for one of the girls,
eliminate autism. Absolutely incredible. So the gut really cleaning up
the diet was very instrumental for those two young ladies.
The other piece of news coming out of Norway is
this they use artificial intelligence to ask the question, is
there anything already on the shelf, any existing medications that
(52:43):
might help us treat autism, especially some of the communicative
issues or the social behavior, And through the magic of AI,
they found one drug in particular, it's called low peramide.
Now you and I know that as emodium. That is
the active ingredient in emodium. And there's some really good
science that explains why emodium or permide might work for
autistic kids in terms of helping them with their symptoms.
(53:06):
But it likely does, and that's what this research showed,
which is really awesome. I tell you, I have a
listener in Pennsylvania who sent me a note about two
or three months after I first discussed this, and they're like,
it's working for my kido and it was so so cool. Again,
people should talk to their doctors about this research to
make sure it's appropriate for their kids. But there's some
really good research out there and hope for folks who
(53:28):
have autistic kids. Very very cool.
Speaker 3 (53:30):
Man. That is amazing to hear.
Speaker 2 (53:32):
Seriously, I you know when I when we talked about
this when I was hosting Jesse Kelly's show. The show
is inundated with the emails about this, so clearly evidence
of two things. People are really I think craving good news,
but also autism touches a lot of families, a lot
of American families. So this is this is really awesome
to hear. What about what about this cancer stuff out
(53:54):
of Israel?
Speaker 1 (53:55):
More good news? So backing up for a second with
the cancer issue. For years, there has been general belief
that exercise is good while you have cancer, certainly to
prevent it, but even if you do have it, different
kinds of exercise gives you great benefit. The question is
what kind of exercise, how often all that kind of
good stuff. So one of the things that some researchers did,
(54:17):
based out of Norway also in Switzerland, is they look
into the intensity of the exercise, and as it turns out,
the more intense the exercise only tend to thirty minutes
the better. So it's its high intensity interval exercise for
about four to seven days a week, every day. But
if you do this, it can do a couple of things.
One it helps prevent cancer, but second it can stop
(54:42):
the metastasized cancer. So if it spreads, it can actually
stop it. And the science behind it is actually quite ingenius.
What happens when you exercise, especially on intense level, is
you create inside of your body a contest for glucose sugar.
So your organs need that to survive and thrive, so
do the tumors. So if you create this competition by
(55:03):
your own bodies seeking this stuff out, it starves the
tumors and allows your body to respond and try to
kill off through your natural killer cells, which exercise also boosts.
So it's really great news that we are continuing to
hear both out you mentioned out of Israel. They're doing
some great work. In fact, one of the things that
they're contributing is that exercise while you're going through chemotherapy
(55:26):
actually helps to prevent neuropathy. Because for folks out there
who've gone through chemo, you know it can and some
people just absolutely damage your nerve systems. But the exercise apparently,
what it does is it decreases some of that inflation
and it really inflammation rather and it helps prevent nerve damage.
So really wonderful news. Exercise is such a key part.
(55:48):
It appears the research is showing across the board. The
more the better, depending on your cancer. Make sure you're
talking to your own coologists and your doc. But I'll
tell you that that high intensity stuff was really important
for me because so many of us we have friends
and loved ones where that cancer spreads and you feel
so hopeless. But to know that you could do that
high intensity interval training or hit kinds of exercise, just
(56:10):
ten twenty minutes of sprinting, that does a tremendous amount
of work inside of your body, stealing that gluecoase from
the tumors, increasing those natural killer cells. So more great
news for folks out there who are struggling with cancer.
Speaker 3 (56:23):
Man, that's amazing, Brian cheez.
Speaker 2 (56:26):
I mean, I suppose that means I'm going to have
to start exercising, because about the most intense thing I
do is tie my shoes and I struggle at even
doing that at the ripe age of forty three.
Speaker 1 (56:35):
So well, is that because you're in an army Sorry,
that was a dig. That wasn't fair.
Speaker 3 (56:42):
That was me. I love the guys there. Tough, but
it's fair tough.
Speaker 2 (56:46):
But you've already outed me as a star wars nerd
and a start and a star trek nerd. Now you're
just taking it to me on the army front. It's true, true,
look tell us, tell us all. Listen, folks, if you're
not following Brian Dean, right on and subscribe to his
podcast wherever you listen to podcasts, The Right Report should
definitely go do it right now.
Speaker 3 (57:05):
But where else can we find you?
Speaker 1 (57:07):
So? Yeah, so my last name is right like the
Wright brothers. So it's the w r Ighd The Right Report.
It's every day and no later than five am Eastern
is when it goes live. I cover events domestically and abroad.
We cover a lot of medical good news as well,
which I was so happy to share with you all today.
And you bet just join us anytime all podcast platforms
you can sign up. You'll hear that message every day
(57:29):
and yeah, occasionally I'll all go on Twitter when I'm
not working or x whatever it's called now, but the
bulk of my work is on the podcast and joining
you right now.
Speaker 3 (57:38):
And thank you all the rice you've got to say
that tell us.
Speaker 1 (57:41):
So this is this is a cool benefit for folks
out there who are interested. So everything that I've just said,
I have transcripts at right report dot substack dot com.
You pay six bucks a month, every day has a
transcript and you can download that transcript. Everything that I'm
talking about is deeply sourced, so you can click on
all of the hyperlinks inside of the transcript that I'll
take you to all the original sourceing, especially which is
(58:02):
great for the medical piece. You can print that out
take to your doctor. So it's not just me bloviating.
I'm backing it up.
Speaker 3 (58:08):
You can.
Speaker 1 (58:08):
You have to pay six bucks, but hey, you know,
we all got to pay the bills. So that is
one of the great resources for folks who are interested.
So it's right Report dot substack dot com. Sign up
every day you'll get those transcripts. But in the meantime,
if you can't do that, times are tough. I get it.
Just listened here because this guy's amazing and to everybody
who is offering him an extra tip. It means the
world to him. I know it does, and he loves y'all.
(58:29):
He's told me about it offline. So thank you for
letting may be part of your show as ever. I
love your audience and I can't wait to come back.
Speaker 3 (58:36):
Hey man, it's right Night. You have a you have
a night named after you.
Speaker 2 (58:39):
Now, we haven't locked down an actual day for right Night,
right yes, but whenever you want, it's right Night.
Speaker 3 (58:46):
That's how well. I don't know if you're cool with that.
We didn't even discuss it.
Speaker 1 (58:50):
I am cool with that. It's just I'm gonna I
am absolutely going to change my voice. It's gonna be
like welcome to Right Night.
Speaker 2 (58:58):
Very so it's like it's a creepy romance show like
Delilah after Dark or something.
Speaker 3 (59:06):
Not that Delilah is creepy.
Speaker 1 (59:08):
But it could be. That's amazing. I could be like
the new Delilah, but like the dude version. Would they
be into that?
Speaker 3 (59:15):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (59:16):
We're gonna find out Right.
Speaker 3 (59:18):
Night, all right man, thank you for joining us. Brother.
Speaker 2 (59:24):
Hopefully we can see you next week, maybe the week after,
as soon as I can get you back and on
the show.
Speaker 3 (59:28):
We want you.
Speaker 2 (59:29):
But thanks for being so generous for your time, Brian.
I'll see you later, my friend, he will take it
all right. That's my friend, Brian Dean Wright. And look,
six bucks on substack is really not a bad deal.
And most of us are constantly on a search for truth.
Speaker 3 (59:42):
You know.
Speaker 2 (59:43):
I struggle sometimes looking for uh when I'm planning a show,
trying to source things and making sure that things that.
Speaker 3 (59:50):
I'm talking about are accurate.
Speaker 2 (59:51):
Well, to be able to have access to Brian subseack
like that, it's a pretty awesome thing.
Speaker 3 (59:57):
So definitely we should support him. He's a great guy.
Speaker 2 (01:00:00):
Okay, so make sure you smash that like button, that
little green thumb beneath the video. Smash it. I see
people in the live chat. You guys are the best
audience in the world. Again, thanks to the Battle Crew.
Thanks for mccroy nation, thanks for all the nubes and
the Battle Crew that the newbies who the newbies who
just joined the show. We love having you join us
(01:00:21):
every single night. This show is fun, it's fast growing.
We need you in the trenches helping and fighting to
save this country. I'm gonna be right back on Wendy
Bel tomorrow three hours of conservative talk radio from nine
to noon. Me and Brock star in the studio. And
by the way, I exist today on this show. I
(01:00:42):
learned how to do this from Brock and from Wendy,
so I love those two. And I've got a show
to plan, So you go for fitnessing this show six
o'clock at night here Eastern Standard time, So I gotta
go plan three hours of conservative talk radio to make
sure I'm bringing you the most cutting edge stuff. So
I'm getting out of here, folks. But again, smash that
(01:01:02):
like button, that little green thumb. Tell your family and
your friends to subscribe to Battleground Live. Keep the faith.
The best is yet to come. Take action in your
community to save this country. And as always, God bless
you all, and God bless this amazing country that we
call home. Take care, good night, and I will see
you tomorrow morning on the Wendy Bell Radio program. Take
(01:01:25):
Care